Wake Up Call

Rev. Dr. Kate Winters

Saturday, April 22nd

The call of the owl was comforting on Tuesday, a sign of the ongoing presence of my mother during unsettling times. This morning, however, she seems to be sending a wake up call. I literally slept all day yesterday, not rising until 4:30 in the afternoon, a full twelve and a half hours later than usual. When upon waking this morning, I immediately began to think that I was supposed to be in Portland hooked up to all sorts of medical machinery, when the call came through my open window, sounding not soothing but rather impatient. “Listen up,” she seemed to say, “shouldn’t you be feeling gratitude? You are alive, you are free, it’s a beautiful day. Get out of that bed and live!”

The owl channeling my mother is wise. It’s true I’ve been spending too much time in bed lately. Not all of that time can be attributed to my heart condition. I am, after all, newly retired. The medical diagnosis has given me a convenient excuse not to deal with what that really means to me. It has put off my planned period of silence and anything else I had hoped to do in this time. The owl calls once again. (I swear it can read my mind.) “Get out of that bed!”

So, here I am, up and writing. Perhaps these two weeks of delay is not only disappointment, but a gift. I can be dealing with something else I’ve been putting off so that when I get out of the hospital, it won’t all just be sitting here waiting for me. Perhaps I can at least find a way to move forward.

I need to turn my work office at home into what I am calling my “hermitage.” I want a room in the house that calls me to prayer, reflection, silence, and writing. Joel and I used to go yearly to a cabin that did these things for me in Rangeley, Maine (yes, the land of the moose!). I was in a whole different mindspace when I got to that cabin. I attribute a large part of that to the simplicity and sparseness of the space itself – it held nothing more than the essentials for daily living. It had a tiny kitchen, a sofa and chair, a bed and bath, a table to write on, and a screened in porch upon which to take in the sunrise. I felt a deeper contentment there than I had anywhere else on earth. That is what I am hoping for in my hermitage.

The biggest challenge is not in setting up the room, just this week we had one of the small windows replaced with a large screened one. It seems to take the whole backyard including the woods inside. I love it. The hardest part is that the rest of the rooms holds my whole life in boxes! Books that I have loved and have changed me from grad school and seminary. At least three decades of liturgical writing – sermons, services, and hymns. Pictures and other objects from my parents’ home after my mother died. What to save? What to let go?

It is not as simple as getting rid of the “clutter” as all the books say. I think it has more to do with figuring out who I am now and what am I about? What is essential to me at this stage in my life? Having had no children, having let go of my church family, having siblings living in other states all with their own children and grandchildren, it is not an easy question for me to answer. I feel untethered, really. What and who am I to serve? This is the question that is calling me to my hermitage. Now that I have gotten out of bed.

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Author: Dwelling in Presence

Striving to live in the present where Spirit is found, I get (t)here most often by writing. It keeps me grounded in both the silence and in my senses. So, welcome to my journal. With a home on mid coast Maine, I have recently retired from 18 years as copastor of The First Church in Belfast, United Church of Christ, with my spouse, Joel Krueger. My spiritual formation has been nurtured by the sensual and sacramental faith of the Roman Catholic church, the heady intellectualism of Yale Divinity School and doctoral studies at Northwestern University, and the justice activism of the United Church of Christ in which I am ordained. Yale Divinity gave me the opportunity to study with pastoral theologian Henri Nouwen who I continue to think of as spiritual mentor these many years later. I have begun this blog to be certain to reach out in a time of great transition and chaos. We are suffering a worldwide pandemic, a global climate crisis, a war-damaged world and great upheaval in the church. With these reflections, I want to share what gives me joy and that which gives me pause. I look forward to hearing yours comments.

3 thoughts on “Wake Up Call”

  1. Ha Ha Kate we are on the same page again! We went up into the attic and started cleaning out things. That’s what they are just things. If we haven’t needed them or used them or read them or looked at them in over 1 year they are gone!! I get it. Its hard to let go of some of the Things, but they are not the memories. We will always keep them!! Love you and Stay out of bed!! KC

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  2. Those are big questions, dear Kate! Sometimes I find that I need a bit of extra sleep or seeming avoidance/ procrastination for my subconscious to chew on the tough stuff. Do moose chew a cud?

    Your blog is so beautiful. When I read it, I feel wrapped in a warm blanket. The world certainly needs more of your writing!

    I was a bit concerned to read how long you slept. I didn’t realize that your heart condition might be affecting your day-to-day functioning so much. Continuing to hold you and Joel in heartfelt prayer.

    ❤ Leora

    Sent from Mail for Windows

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